By Jacqueline Thomsen | September 9, 2020
The ABA found 33-year-old Kathryn Mizelle, a Jones Day associate who was admitted to the bar in 2012, did not have enough trial experience for the federal judgeship.
By Ross Todd | September 9, 2020
"Our constitutional mandates are such that perhaps when we started this, we thought we could just wait it out. We can't do that. That's not the case. So what we're doing is everything we can to make sure people are safe when they come to the courthouse."
By Ross Todd | September 9, 2020
"We're in the 'making people do things' business. We have to be good stewards of that because if we're not then the criminal justice system—which is taking its lumps these days—is only going to be in worse shape."
By Jacqueline Thomsen | September 8, 2020
"It's a very dangerous idea if people think judges are beholden to a political party or a partisan agenda. And those who claim we are, they do the republic great harm in that," recently retired D.C. Circuit Judge Thomas Griffith said.
By Ryan Tarinelli | September 8, 2020
Chief Judge Janet DiFiore reports that more than 1,700 people showed up for grand jury duty in New York City courthouses during a week in August. She says that figure is "only slightly lower" than response rates before the coronavirus pandemic.
By Ryan Tarinelli | September 8, 2020
Chief Judge Janet DiFiore reports that more than 1,700 people showed up for grand jury duty in New York City courthouses during a week in August. She says that figure is "only slightly lower" than response rates before the pandemic.
By Cheryl Miller | September 4, 2020
Allies of Fredericka McGee seized on a public comment session to offer more than an hour of endorsements of her ability to run California's state bar.
By Ellen Bardash | September 4, 2020
The specific plan for holding jury trials beginning in October was developed by five subcommittees formed by the Courts Reopening Committee, each of which studied a stage of jury selection and presented their findings Aug. 25.
By Greg Land | September 3, 2020
Dispossessories that began to mount after the CARES Act moratorium expired will likely dry up again in the wake of a new ban—if it survives legal challenges.
By Jane Wester | September 2, 2020
"Make no mistake: this court will not view the process through rose-colored glasses, and difficulties are to be anticipated," U.S. District Judge Gary Brown wrote.
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